
Scott Anthony, Affiliated Research Scholar in the Faculty of History, discusses Jeremy Corbyn's Labour leadership campaign and the history of political 'spin'.
Scott Anthony, Affiliated Research Scholar in the Faculty of History, discusses Jeremy Corbyn's Labour leadership campaign and the history of political 'spin'.
It strikes me as no coincidence that the biggest economic and political shift that modern Britain has ever seen came in the wake of the new practices of public relations
Scott Anthony
Conventional wisdom has it that a lack of guile contributed to Jeremy Corbyn鈥檚 shock triumph in the Labour leadership election. He won because he was .
But having been smeared, derided and traduced by the press since winning the election, Corbyn is being urged ahead of today鈥檚 party conference speech to get 鈥減rofessional鈥 鈥 in other words time to get spinning or be lost.
But maybe a glance at how PR itself has changed will reveal that what Corbyn is doing has its own merit. It鈥檚 not clear that a more 鈥減rofessional鈥 approach, where this is taken simply to mean returning to media relations as usual 鈥 of the kind used by Number 10 in the Blair era 鈥 would increase the amount of favourable coverage he gets.
Although Corbyn鈥檚 speeches might benefit from more rehearsal, it鈥檚 also important to think about where Corbyn has been strong. How he has achieved the for a Labour leader and massively increased party membership.
One of the most interesting aspects about his successful campaign for the Labour leadership was that 鈥 unwittingly or not 鈥 it revived an older practice of public relations in the UK. Because the idea that public relations is mainly about managing press headlines, or measuring media coverage is actually a relatively new one.
听

听
It also an idea that plays into a myth that is comforting to journalists, that media opinion is the same as public opinion: that the whole complexity of the public鈥檚 relationships can be contained in the media鈥檚 representation of them. Or as Campbell put it to the Leveson enquiry with typically astute bluntness: 鈥淚t鈥檚 journalists that are the real spin doctors.鈥
1930s-style PR
By contrast, Corbyn appears to see public relations as the pioneers of the profession in the UK saw it, as an add-on to civic society not as a container for it. A local mental health charity event on the Andrew Marr show.
It鈥檚 a little-known story that the pioneers of public relations in the UK were the people who promoted the London Tube map and Routemaster buses, who invented 鈥渄ial 999鈥, the speaking clock and the Jubilee telephone kiosk. These 1930s innovations were prompted by we face today: economic depression, new technology, and the unpredictable path of mass democracy.
Having come to prominence during the slump, partly as a way of navigating totalitarianism, during the war these pioneers would build the V for Victory campaign, design new towns and plan the Festival of Britain. These initiatives weren鈥檛 done to increase media reach, or win the headlines (which they understood were controlled by the newspaper barons and newsreel censors) but they were about building relationships.
People in interwar Britain 鈥 from the poor and marginalised to the new consumer classes 鈥 were put into contact by these new media pioneers through discussions, films and even telephone debates. They took the electorate seriously. for making a new nation .
When you look at the artwork that David Gentleman did for the Stop the War campaign, which was chaired by Corbyn, or simply the sharply designed logo of his leadership campaign, you can see something of this older visual tradition of public relations in the UK. Good design and media enabled civic connectivity as a conduit for actual social and attitudinal change.
By contrast, an analysis is that young Corbyn voters in the election were a regrettable product of an irresponsible age of social media. An age where people want opinions that project a personal image to the world 鈥 so-called identity politics 鈥 and which , rather than picking sensible leaders that could win a grown-up election.
Ironically, this is actually quite an old put down; a curmudgeonly dismissal that tends to resurface every time the prospect of political transformation, for example the and the working class, rears its anarchic head.
While it wasn鈥檛 the change that the pioneers expected, it鈥檚 always struck me that it is no coincidence that the biggest economic and political shift that modern Britain has ever seen arguably came in the wake of the new practices of public relations finding their feet in the 1930s.
Sneer if you want but 鈥
探花直播21st century may once more show the strength of the pioneers' approach to public relations. 探花直播short-term managing of headlines is an impossible task 鈥 in a 24-hour news environment a politician will likely always look on the defensive in times of crisis (real or manufactured). Instead, political parties are forced to play a longer game while shrewd politicians begin to stock up on integrity for the inevitable moments when their judgement goes astray. 探花直播wheel has turned and approaches that were once dismissed as old hat are starting to look prescient again. Unwittingly or not, this is the approach that Corbyn has taken.
All of which makes it important that being 鈥減rofessional鈥 at the conference in Brighton does not prelude the Labour leadership from continuing to focus on ways to coax the wide network of civic and social relationships that they can call upon (a network far wider than that of the present-day Conservatives) into the media. Bring these groups together 鈥 verbally, visually and emotionally 鈥 and unpredictable things will happen.
It鈥檚 worth remembering that the UK鈥檚 news media at the many social and political oddities of coalition against the Iraq War in 2003 but it marked a watershed in British politics, let alone new Labour鈥檚 electoral fortunes, that few predicted at the time.
Equally, it鈥檚 worth remembering that it was at a low ebb in World War II that the 鈥淰 for Victory鈥 campaign was born. What came out of existential weakness has now by a strange trick of history come to be seen as part of an inevitable triumph. There was little that was 鈥減rofessional鈥 about it.
, Affiliated Research Scholar ,
This article was originally published on . Read the .
探花直播opinions expressed in this article are those of the individual author(s) and do not represent the views of the 探花直播 of Cambridge.
探花直播text in this work is licensed under a . For image use please see separate credits above.